Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is now way I am spending over a mill for a home in Arlington. I could live in Bethesda or McLean at that price point.
Agreed. Arlington sucks.
I wouldn't go that far, but I'm not paying over a million dollars for a house in Alrington either. As PP said, you can buy in much fancier neighborhoods. North Arlington is a fantastic area for between 750k and 950k. I just don't like it at higher price points. I know there are some nice parts of North Arlington that regularly sell at the higher price points, but I wouldn't be one of those buyers.
You either got the coins or you don't.
If you work in city, then Arlington is a natural choice for good schools and commute time.
I live in Arlington in over $1M home because to me time is a prime asset in life. I love knowing I can drive-in 15 minutes or this week in 10 minutes to DC.
Schools may be overrated but I like being able to be there to help my kids with their homework.
Nothing wrong with your choice, but I agree with the PP. Arlington does not have the name recognition, prestige, amenities or schools that I would want at that price point. I'd certainly prefer Bethesda, McLean or Chevy Chase over Arlington at that price point.
I'm trying to understand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is now way I am spending over a mill for a home in Arlington. I could live in Bethesda or McLean at that price point.
Agreed. Arlington sucks.
I wouldn't go that far, but I'm not paying over a million dollars for a house in Alrington either. As PP said, you can buy in much fancier neighborhoods. North Arlington is a fantastic area for between 750k and 950k. I just don't like it at higher price points. I know there are some nice parts of North Arlington that regularly sell at the higher price points, but I wouldn't be one of those buyers.
You either got the coins or you don't.
If you work in city, then Arlington is a natural choice for good schools and commute time.
I live in Arlington in over $1M home because to me time is a prime asset in life. I love knowing I can drive-in 15 minutes or this week in 10 minutes to DC.
Schools may be overrated but I like being able to be there to help my kids with their homework.
Nothing wrong with your choice, but I agree with the PP. Arlington does not have the name recognition, prestige, amenities or schools that I would want at that price point. I'd certainly prefer Bethesda, McLean or Chevy Chase over Arlington at that price point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How the hell do so many people afford houses at a million or over? Our HHI is 260k, we're doing well, but think this would be out of reach. Are people overextending themselves or paying less than 20% down, or is everyone just at lawfirms, or...
I feel like lots of people earn 200k or more these days. Folks I know earning 100k are still living the adolescent apartment life in DC. Our HHI is about 600k.
Delusional
???
How much does the average household with a $1 million dollar house make? $400k?
$1 million house is doable with 300k if no significant other expenses like student loans or nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is now way I am spending over a mill for a home in Arlington. I could live in Bethesda or McLean at that price point.
Agreed. Arlington sucks.
I wouldn't go that far, but I'm not paying over a million dollars for a house in Alrington either. As PP said, you can buy in much fancier neighborhoods. North Arlington is a fantastic area for between 750k and 950k. I just don't like it at higher price points. I know there are some nice parts of North Arlington that regularly sell at the higher price points, but I wouldn't be one of those buyers.
You either got the coins or you don't.
If you work in city, then Arlington is a natural choice for good schools and commute time.
I live in Arlington in over $1M home because to me time is a prime asset in life. I love knowing I can drive-in 15 minutes or this week in 10 minutes to DC.
Schools may be overrated but I like being able to be there to help my kids with their homework.
Nothing wrong with your choice, but I agree with the PP. Arlington does not have the name recognition, prestige, amenities or schools that I would want at that price point. I'd certainly prefer Bethesda, McLean or Chevy Chase over Arlington at that price point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is now way I am spending over a mill for a home in Arlington. I could live in Bethesda or McLean at that price point.
Agreed. Arlington sucks.
I wouldn't go that far, but I'm not paying over a million dollars for a house in Alrington either. As PP said, you can buy in much fancier neighborhoods. North Arlington is a fantastic area for between 750k and 950k. I just don't like it at higher price points. I know there are some nice parts of North Arlington that regularly sell at the higher price points, but I wouldn't be one of those buyers.
You either got the coins or you don't.
If you work in city, then Arlington is a natural choice for good schools and commute time.
I live in Arlington in over $1M home because to me time is a prime asset in life. I love knowing I can drive-in 15 minutes or this week in 10 minutes to DC.
Schools may be overrated but I like being able to be there to help my kids with their homework.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is now way I am spending over a mill for a home in Arlington. I could live in Bethesda or McLean at that price point.
Agreed. Arlington sucks.
I wouldn't go that far, but I'm not paying over a million dollars for a house in Alrington either. As PP said, you can buy in much fancier neighborhoods. North Arlington is a fantastic area for between 750k and 950k. I just don't like it at higher price points. I know there are some nice parts of North Arlington that regularly sell at the higher price points, but I wouldn't be one of those buyers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is now way I am spending over a mill for a home in Arlington. I could live in Bethesda or McLean at that price point.
Agreed. Arlington sucks.
Anonymous wrote:There is now way I am spending over a mill for a home in Arlington. I could live in Bethesda or McLean at that price point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How the hell do so many people afford houses at a million or over? Our HHI is 260k, we're doing well, but think this would be out of reach. Are people overextending themselves or paying less than 20% down, or is everyone just at lawfirms, or...
I feel like lots of people earn 200k or more these days. Folks I know earning 100k are still living the adolescent apartment life in DC. Our HHI is about 600k.
Delusional
???
How much does the average household with a $1 million dollar house make? $400k?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How the hell do so many people afford houses at a million or over? Our HHI is 260k, we're doing well, but think this would be out of reach. Are people overextending themselves or paying less than 20% down, or is everyone just at lawfirms, or...
I feel like lots of people earn 200k or more these days. Folks I know earning 100k are still living the adolescent apartment life in DC. Our HHI is about 600k.
Delusional
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How the hell do so many people afford houses at a million or over? Our HHI is 260k, we're doing well, but think this would be out of reach. Are people overextending themselves or paying less than 20% down, or is everyone just at lawfirms, or...
I feel like lots of people earn 200k or more these days. Folks I know earning 100k are still living the adolescent apartment life in DC. Our HHI is about 600k.
Anonymous wrote:How the hell do so many people afford houses at a million or over? Our HHI is 260k, we're doing well, but think this would be out of reach. Are people overextending themselves or paying less than 20% down, or is everyone just at lawfirms, or...